Afroasiatic languages: The Chadic Languages
The Chadic Languages
The Chadic group of languages are spoken near Lake Chad in central Africa. Its most important tongue is Hausa, a West Chadic language native to 25 million people, of whom about 19 million live in N Nigeria, 5 million in Niger, and 1 million in Cameroon, Togo, and Benin. In addition, Hausa is widely used as a lingua franca in W Africa. Written Hausa has long employed an alphabet based on that of Arabic, but today it is turning increasingly to a system based on Roman characters. The written literature in Hausa includes both poetry and prose. Among the many other Chadic tongues are Angas, Bole, Gwandara, Ron, and other West Chadic languages; the Masa languages; Kera, Mubi, Nancere, Tobanga, and other East Chadic languages; and Kamwe, Kotoko, Mandara, and other Biu-Mandara languages.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Role of Semitic Languages in the Development of Writing Systems
- The Chadic Languages
- The Cushitic and Omotic Languages
- The Berber Languages
- South Semitic Division
- West Semitic Division
- The Semitic Languages
- The Egyptian Languages
- Bibliography
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